{"id":48,"date":"2010-05-05T10:36:42","date_gmt":"2010-05-05T08:36:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/?p=48"},"modified":"2011-04-16T12:25:41","modified_gmt":"2011-04-16T10:25:41","slug":"life-and-death-a-response-to-lierre-keiths-animism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/?p=48","title":{"rendered":"Life and death: a response to Lierre Keith&#8217;s animism"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"node-14\">\n<div>\n<div>\n<p><em>This is a response to Lierre Keith&#8217;s argument in The Vegetarian Myth, a poorly researched, fallacious and dishonestly argued anti-vegan screed. It was originally written for <a href=\"http:\/\/www.thevegetarianmyth.com\">www.thevegetarianmyth.com<\/a>, a never-completed crowdsourced response to Keith&#8217;s book.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Inconsistent animist ethics<\/strong><br \/>\nKeith defends her position with a confused animist-type ethics that  veers unclearly and inconsistently between hylozoism (everything has  life) and panpsychism (everything has a mind).<\/p>\n<p>The former position \u2013 that everything can be said to have some kind  of life \u2013 is relatively unproblematic. If we define life simply as an  aggregation of organic matter such that said aggregation has the  capacity to partipate in or respond to its environment in some manner,  we can certainly accept, as most people do, that cows and carrots are  both equally alive.<\/p>\n<p>It is, however, Keith&#8217;s constant appeal to the latter position \u2013 that everything has a mind &#8211; that is fundamentally flawed.<\/p>\n<p>Keith repeatedly claims throughout her book that plants are not just  alive in the same way as animals, but that they have volition and are  the subjects of some type of conscious experience, to the extent that  seeds love their lives and apples &#8216;eat&#8217;. In other words, Keith \u2013  somewhat ironically, given that she levels the exact same charge against  vegans &#8211; anthropomorphises all life.<\/p>\n<p>Although most people would usually give strong panpsychist claims  like this short shrift, what makes them so much more appealing in The  Vegetarian Myth is that they are conflated with the less contentious  claims that everything is alive.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>Keith&#8217;s specific approach here is to present vivid, compelling  illustrations of the majestic complexity of life and the ecosystems it  forms part of. For instance:<br \/>\n<em><br \/>\n\u201c&#8230;a world where humans approach every creature\u2014every rock, every  raindrop, all our furred and feathered siblings\u2014with humility, awe, and  respect; the only world with a chance of surviving the abuse called  civilization.\u201d (11-12)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&#8230;and then slips her troubling panpsychist claims in by the back  door; appeals to emotion and textbook cases of misleading vividness  like:<br \/>\n<em><br \/>\n\u201cTo believe in food that requires \u201cNo killing or theft from animal or  plant\u201d is to recognize that plants and animals love their lives, and  their body parts, whether fibrous or muscular. But not their offspring?  The argument fails right here. If we believe in their sentience, why not  in the sentience of their babies?\u201d (15)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&#8230;essentially equating eating fruit to killing babies, thus  rendering veganism as ethically problematic (and thus as ethically  unproblematic) as eating meat (or, indeed, killing babies. One shudders  at the implications of extending Keith&#8217;s argument to other domains!)<\/p>\n<p>At the core of this confusion between life and sentience is a  fundamental blurring of metaphor, synecdoche and fact. Instead of  accepting the metaphorical status of, for instance, the commonly  accepted statement that some plants get really thirsty, Keith represents  this statement as defining an actual physical characteristic that  implies a high degree of plant sentience, thus making plants the  recipients of the kinds of ethical considerations we would usually only  afford non-animals by virtue of their degree of sentience.<\/p>\n<p>This is a dangerous and misleading game\u00a0 whereby Keith abuses our  common cultural perceptions\u00a0 \u2013 often described in romantic, metaphorical  terms \u2013 of plant life.<\/p>\n<p>Keith then goes further than this by confusing a reverence for life  with an anthropomorphised reverence for individual instances for life.  For example, whereas most people would accept that an ecosystem as a  whole needs to be recognised as having great import, especially if it  supports beings who are, unarguably, subjects of a life, and for the  equally important reason that it represents a great deal of creative  potential by virtue of its status as a complex system of diverse agents  that generates the types of novelty key to the dynamic unfolding of life  on Earth, Keith asserts that this moral worth inheres in any one of the  actual instances of life that form part of an ecosystem and can be said  to represent it.<\/p>\n<p>More simply put, she shifts the relevant object of moral  consideration (the ecosystem) via synecdoche (a synecdoche is where part  of something can be said to stand in for the whole \u2013 referring to &#8216;my  set of wheels&#8217; instead of &#8216;my car&#8217;, for instance) in order to bolster  her panpsychism argument.<\/p>\n<p>Now, if Keith used solely panpsychic claims ,without appeal to  hylozoism, there would be no problems with the consistency of her  argument. However, it seems clear that she recognises the indefensible  nature of na\u00efve panpsychism and has thus purposefully muddied the waters  by defining her ethics in a piecemeal, ad-hoc and inconsistent fashion.<\/p>\n<p>(What is also notable here, at the very least for its inconsistency,  is that she reverses the object of moral consideration back to the  ecosystem or planet has a whole when she considers the ecological impact  of agriculture and factory farming.)<\/p>\n<p>Here are some other examples of panpsychic claims Keith makes (anthropomorphising language in bold):<\/p>\n<p><em><br \/>\n\u201c&#8230;for someone to live, someone else has to die.\u201d (5 &amp; 71)<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em><br \/>\n\u201cWe automatically think of domestication as something we do to other  species, but it makes just as much sense to think of it as something  that certain plants and animals have done to us, a clever evolutionary  strategy for advancing their own interests. The species that have spent  the last ten thousand or so years figuring out how best to feed, heal,  clothe, intoxi\u00adcate, and otherwise delight us have made themselves some  of nature\u2019s greatest success stories.\u201d &#8211; Michael Pollan, quoted by Keith  (26)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe first requirement for domestication is a plant willing to stretch its genome to fit a human need.\u201d (30)<\/p>\n<p><em>\u201cWhether life on earth is one organism, and whether all of it is  conscious, are ultimately spiritual questions. I don\u2019t think the  an\u00adswers can be argued, only experienced. And I\u2019ve had my experiences. I  know what I believe. I\u2019m not asking you to agree with me, only to  observe. Squirrels bury acorns. Oak trees feed squirrels. Monarch  but\u00adterflies need asclepias, and not just for the sugar. Asclepias  produce a specific chemical in their nectar that render monarchs toxic  to their predators. Who is working for whom? Human relationships with  chickens and pigs, rice and barley, are no different.\u201d (30)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>(Note the unfalsifiable appeal to personal experience and the explicit disallowing of argumentation in this last quote.)<\/p>\n<p>The following quote is one of the strongest examples of the misleading vividness of Keith&#8217;s arguments:<\/p>\n<p><em>\u201cSince killing is the sacrilege in this moral system, he can\u2019t  acknowledge that in actuality he\u2019s eating something alive. This, despite  the fact that he sees plants as beings deserving his respect. \u201c (25)<br \/>\n<\/em><br \/>\n(Note the shift between &#8216;respect&#8217;, &#8216;alive&#8217; and &#8216;killing&#8217;. Here Keith  makes a non-controversial claim that plants deserve respect as parts of  dynamic, evolving ecosystems, then erroneously extends this claim by  implying that because plants deserve respect it must be because they are  &#8216;alive&#8217; in some way which affords them ethical consideration and,  furthermore, plants can be killed in a manner that is sacrilegous to  vegans practicing non-cruelty; the clear implication residing in this  dubious chain of faulty logic is that eating a plant is tantamount to  murder!)<\/p>\n<p>Interestingly, Keith actually does accept the notion of unique affordances occasionally:<\/p>\n<p><em> \u201c&#8230;all animals have their own specific abilities.\u201d (79)<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Difference<br \/>\n<\/strong>There is another serious problem with Keith&#8217;s poorly conceived  animist ethics: even if you accept that everything from raindrops to  rhubarbs to reindeer is alive, it does not follow that the way in which  we engage each thing \u2013 the relational space formed by us and this  &#8216;living&#8217; Other \u2013 must be homogeneous. In fact, prominent modern animists  like Graham Harvey (the author of Animism: Respecting the Living World)  sometimes say quite the opposite: that the relationships we form with  any other instance of life are informed by the unique properties of each  that life. The possible ways in which we connect with or relate to a  cabbage, for instance, do not entirely overlap with the possible ways in  which we relate to a caribou, for the simple reason that a caribou  exhibits different properties to a cabbage.<\/p>\n<p>In the words of the philosopher Gilles Deleuze, caribous and cabbages  have different affordances in relation to us, an affordance being,  quite literally, what something can afford us. A painting in a gallery,  for example, affords us a pleasurable aesthetic experience, or  inspiration, whereas the tiled gallery floor affords us something to  walk on and the gallery ticket affords us access to the space when these  are participants in a larger relationship that includes an entrance  hall and someone who collects tickets.<\/p>\n<p>(Out of interest, Deleuze sometimes extends this thinking to make the  claim that we only really understand things by virtue of their  affordances \u2013 we know things only in the experience of some or all of  the possible ways in which we can interact with them. In this reading,  in stark contrast to Keith&#8217;s Lego-block ontology of  always-interchangeable elements, acknowledging heterogeneity and  practicing heterogeneous engagements with any specific life is  fundamental.)<\/p>\n<p>For Keith then, the awe-inspiring and productive heterogeneity of the  natural world is reduced to a simple claim that everything eats and is  eaten&#8230;she diminishes all possible affordances to food \/ sustenance.<br \/>\n<em><br \/>\n\u201cThe grass and the grazers need each other as much as predators and  prey. These are not one-way relationships, not arrangements of dominance  and subordination. We aren\u2019t exploiting each other by eat\u00ading. We are  only taking turns.\u201d (8)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>This position, apart from offering us a highly impoverished account  of the world and all its diverse forms of life, is also completely  arbitrary: one could equally easily make the claim that the &#8216;one simple  fact of life&#8217; is that everything has some kind of sex in order to  reproduce itself; that life on Earth is just ongoing Dionysian orgiastic  excess, which we should, in order to remain faithful to this law,  repeat as often and as widely as possible, without limiting our impulses  (which are just as fundamental to our biology as our desire to eat,  surely) based on arbitrary categories like age or consent. Everything  affords everything else an opportunity for sex and reproduction. That&#8217;s  it.<\/p>\n<p>It should be clear that there are serious problems with such a  distorted, reductionist claim, examples where it would clearly be  morally wrong to intervene in this specific manner in the life of  another being. Indeed, what matters here, as with what we choose to eat,  is what any one of the other beings we wish to engage actually affords  us. Which, if we are creatures capable of conceiving of and practicing  ethics, must include consent.<\/p>\n<p>Almost everyone shares the simple ethical notion that one should not  unnecessarily intervene cruelly into the lives of non-consenting others;  for most people this extends to human beings and to some animals in  some instances; for animal rights activists it extends to all non-human  animals that can be said to be the subjects of a life and possess the  kinds of relevant capacities that impel us to grant humans moral  consideration (sense of self, ability to suffer, will to live). It is  only by making the notion of consent secondary to a flawed presentation  of &#8216;natural law&#8217; that flattens all life into one moral category that  Keith is able to sidestep the pivotal issue of what should actually be  considered by moral agents when deciding how to treat any specific  instance of other life.<\/p>\n<p>Keith also makes anthropocentric claims about consent:<\/p>\n<p><em>\u201cI\u2019m not exploiting them. They\u2019re happy, safe, warm, and fed. I\u2019m  the one who\u2019s miserable. Chickens won\u2019t even walk in snow, let alone  haul supplies to me. That wet drip sliding down my spine was like a cold  jab of reality. Chickens have gotten humans to work for them. In  exchange, they take care of us, but not by bringing us water. By  providing food\u2014meat and eggs\u2014and a whole constellation of other  activities useful for farms. It\u2019s a partnership, and one that worked out  well for both parties until factory-farming. The genome of the jungle  fowl took a chance on humans and it was a gamble that paid off. We have  carried chickens all over the globe, extending their range beyond the  wildest dreams of a broody jungle fowl mom, ready and willing to give  all to her eggs.\u201d (25-26)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Keith appeals, via Michael Pollan, to the limited way in which we divide the world into subject-object relationships:<\/p>\n<p><em>\u201cWe need to take ourselves out of the subject position. We need to realize that we aren\u2019t so special.\u201c (27)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Even if we do allow for a more expansive notion of subjecthood than  is usually the case though, we&#8217;re still left with unique, specific  subjectivities in all their glorious idiosyncrasy and with all their  novel affordances.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, Keith abuses feminist and anti-hierarchical discourse by  implying\u00a0 that any argument that different forms of life are worthy of  different types of moral consideration is inherently hierarchical and  patriarchal; that the &#8216;food chain&#8217; is a circle, not a pyramid &#8211; she  calls the latter &#8216;the Man as Apex myth&#8217; (23) &#8211; and that veganism is a  denial of fertility \/ life linked to patriarchy:<\/p>\n<p><em>\u201cLooked at through my vegan eyes, it was a possible end point of  my desperate urge to refrain from killing. Why even kill plants when I  didn\u2019t have to kill at all? But looked at through my feminist, political  eyes, I was uneasy about this project. Religions around the world  engaged in ascetic practices like severe fasting, and what those  religions had in common was patriarchy. Their He-God was removed from  the earth, and holiness was achieved by denying the world, made of  flesh. Women were temptations of sin, our bodies sources of shame  instead of miracles. \u201cTo live without eating was, of course, to deny  one\u2019s need for mate\u00adrial support or earthly connection,\u201d writes Joan  Jacobs Brumberg in Fasting Girls: The History of Anorexia Nervosa.89 The  pagan in me rebelled against the idea of vilifying hunger, sex,  bodies\u2014life. Was there a way to starve without starving, to embrace life  so fully I could live on air, light, energy, the cosmos? Anything  besides dead things?\u201d (62-63)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>She also conflates veganism with asceticism (specifically starvation):<\/p>\n<p><em>\u201cI had firmly and forever left that world where starvation was the standard and politics a thin gruel of nourishment. \u201c (70)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>There is a much simpler way to make the case against Keith&#8217;s  &#8216;complete moral equivalence&#8217; claim, by the way: imagine that her  reasoning is a defence of cannibalism and then see if you still find her  argument as compelling.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This is a response to Lierre Keith&#8217;s argument in The Vegetarian Myth, a poorly researched, fallacious and dishonestly argued anti-vegan screed. It was originally written for www.thevegetarianmyth.com, a never-completed crowdsourced response to Keith&#8217;s book. &nbsp; Inconsistent animist ethics Keith defends her position with a confused animist-type ethics that veers unclearly and inconsistently between hylozoism (everything\u2026 <a href=\"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/?p=48\">Read More &raquo;<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4,7,5,3],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/48"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=48"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/48\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":59,"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/48\/revisions\/59"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=48"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=48"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/meme.co.za\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=48"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}